The Tacey Sowle Fund is a modest fund supported by a percentage of QUIP's membership dues. It is intended to assist Quaker authors and publishers in countries less affluent than those in which most of our members live. Grant sizes range from a few hundred to a small number of thousands of dollars. It has assisted translation as well as publication. Applications for travel from such countries to QUIP meetings would also be considered. For more information, apply to one of the clerks.

Tacey (or Tace) Sowle Raylton 1665?-1749

Tace Sowle was born in around 1665, the daughter of Andrew [1628-1695]
and
Jane Sowle [d 1711], both printers of London.
Although businesses such as printing were officially carried on only by
men, in practice women took a full share in the work, particularly if
they
were widows of printers or came from a printing family. Tace's father
Andrew had himself been apprenticed for seven years from 1646 to a
woman,
Ruth Raworth.

Tace was more than just a bookseller but, as a fellow
printer
said of her, "understood her trade very well, being a good compositor
herself." She carried on her father's business when he began to lose his
sight and probably had full control of it from 1691.
In 1706 Tace married Thomas Raylton [1671-1723], who although then
registered as a hosier, soon became a printer too. There is no record of
any children of the marriage. From this time until Thomas died of asthma
in
1723 Tace and Thomas traded under the name of Tace's mother as 'Assigns
of
J. Sowle'.

Tace considerably increased the number of Quaker books published by the
firm and eventually became virtually the official Quaker printer. She
sometimes had more of an eye to business than some Friends appreciated,
often printing more copies of a book than she had been asked for if she
thought that there was a demand, until her paymasters, Six Weeks
Meeting,
ordered her to stop. In 1734 she was asked to join the Womens Meeting of
London, probably so that they could draw on her business acumen, as Tace
was never a public Friend.

Printing was very much a family business and one of Tace's sisters,
Elizabeth, married William Bradford, the first Quaker printer in
America.
After Thomas's death Tace Sowle Raylton published under her own name
until
1738 when she took on her nephew, Luke Hinde, as a partner. He inherited
the business and carried it on, still publishing Quaker books, after
Tace
died in 1749, the oldest printer in London, at the age of eighty four.

Tace's name comes from the Latin taceo - I am silent - and we have no
writings of her own, but her skill made it certain that other Quaker
writers were heard.